Immigration is the primary source of growth in the prime-age labor force: Labor force growth for ages 25–54, overall and without immigrants (in millions), 1994–2024

  Actual overall growth Growth without immigrants
1994 0.0 0.0
1995 1.3 1.2
1996 2.9 1.6
1997 4.4 2.3
1998 4.8 2.1
1999 5.5 2.6
2000 7.5 2.8
2001 7.8 2.4
2002 7.8 2.1
2003 8.4 1.9
2004 8.2 1.5
2005 8.8 1.8
2006 9.6 1.7
2007 10.4 1.8
2008 10.5 1.7
2009 9.8 1.1
2010 9.0 0.1
2011 7.8 -0.9
2012 7.3 -1.9
2013 6.8 -2.4
2014 6.8 -2.6
2015 7.2 -2.5
2016 8.3 -1.8
2017 8.7 -1.6
2018 9.8 -1.2
2019 10.2 -0.7
2020 8.7 -1.2
2021 8.9 -1.4
2022 10.9 -0.6
2023 12.6 0.5
2024 13.6 0.6
Economic Policy Institute

Notes: Immigrants are defined as the foreign-born population, including non-citizens and naturalized U.S. citizens, but excluding the population born abroad to American parents, following the Census Bureau's convention on estimating the foreign-born population. The growth without immigrants is cumulative growth of the U.S.-born population.

Source: EPI analysis of the basic monthly Current Population Survey microdata, accessed via EPI Current Population Survey Extracts, Version 1.0.61 (2025), https://microdata.epi.org.

View the underlying data on epi.org.